n. Dirt; mud. [Prov. Eng.]n. Blood that is shed or drawn from the body; thick or clotted blood.n. A relatively long and narrow triangular strip or slip; a projecting point. Specificallyn. A triangular piece or tapering strip of land.n. In Maine and Vermont, and formerly in Massachusetts, an unorganized and thinly settled subdivision of a county.n. A triangular piece or strip of material inserted to make something, as a garment or a sail, wider in one part than in another; especially, in dressmaking, a long triangle introduced to make a skirt wider at the bottom or hem than at the waist. See goring.n. A part of the dress; hence, the dress itself; a garment.n. An angular plank used in fitting a vessel's skin to the frames.n. In heraldry, a charge consisting of two curved lines, one from the sinister chief point, the other from the base middle point, meeting in an acute angle in the middle of the fesse-point. Also called gusset.To shape like a gore; cut or treat so as to form a gore.To furnish with a gore or gores, as a dress-skirt or a sail.To pierce; penetrate with a pointed instrument, as a spear or a horn; wound deeply.To scoop; dig.